How do you factor # 25x^4 + 16x^2y^2 + 4y^4#?
2 Answers
Explanation:
Note that:
#(a^2-kab+b^2)(a^2+kab+b^2) = a^4+(2-k^2)a^2b^2+b^4#
Putting
#(5x^2-ksqrt(10)xy+2y^2)(5x^2+ksqrt(10)xy+2y^2)#
#=25x^4+10(2-k^2)x^2y^2+4y^4#
Solve:
#16 = 10(2-k^2) = 20-10k^2#
So:
#10k^2 = 20-16=4#
#k^2 = 2/5 = 10/25#
#k=+-sqrt(10)/5#
So:
#ksqrt(10) = +-sqrt(10)/5*sqrt(10) = +-2#
Hence:
#25x^4+16x^2y^2+4y^4 = (5x^2-2xy+2y^2)(5x^2+2xy+2y^2)#
Explanation:
This is kind of tricky and involves some intuition. First, notice that we have a lot of square terms, e.g.
A good trick for these is to try to create squared trinomials, which come in the form
From this, we can see that we almost have
We can write the given expression as:
#25x^4+16x^2y^2+4y^4=25x^4+(20x^2y^2-4x^2y^2)+4y^4#
We can then reorder this so that
#25x^4+(20x^2y^2-4x^2y^2)+4y^4=(25x^4+20x^2y^2+4y^4)-4x^2y^2#
Recall that
#(25x^4+20x^2y^2+4y^4)-4x^2y^2=(5x^2+2y^2)^2-(2xy)^2#
What we now have is a difference of squares, which can be factored as
#(5x^2+2y^2)^2-(2xy)^2=(5x^2+2xy+2y^2)(5x^2-2xy+2y^2)#